Institutional
in sentence
1761 examples of Institutional in a sentence
Financing for the most expensive projects – implementing green-energy systems, building transport infrastructure, and developing modern cities – must come from foreign
institutional
investors.
Bucking the resource curse requires, first and foremost, strong, legitimate domestic political leadership, underpinned by effective
institutional
arrangements.
That will require complex, multiple, varied, and integrated responses from a very wide variety of sources at individual, institutional, societal, and global levels.
If Chinese regulators allow the market to correct, sophisticated
institutional
investors with a long-term value orientation will ultimately step in, enhancing the market’s stability.
The only practical way forward is for the Chinese authorities to focus on regulatory and
institutional
development, while following through on their commitment to allow markets to play the decisive role in allocating resources.
Today, there is a broad consensus that shock therapy, at least at the level of microeconomic reforms, failed, and that countries (Hungary, Poland, and Slovenia) that took the gradualist approach to privatization and the reconstruction of
institutional
infrastructure managed their transitions far better than those that tried to leapfrog into a laissez-faire economy.
As with any other good, how information is consumed reflects economic and political opportunities, personal incentives, and
institutional
or cultural norms.
In a joint report on the competitiveness of the Arab countries, the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD) and the World Economic Forum call for urgent
institutional
reform to support private-sector growth.
This entails strengthening China’s
institutional
foundations and establishing clear, transparent rules, in order to encourage experimentation and innovation, ensure the smooth exit of failed projects, and manage the fallout of errors.
The
institutional
structure envisaged by the proposed European Constitution should also reflect and help develop Europe's broader aspirations.
Iraq is showing some positive signs of political and
institutional
recovery, but the omens for the future remain, in Obama’s own words, “messy.”
For years they have been present in the legal and
institutional
framework of the European Union - in treaties, in the Charter of Fundamental Rights (which quotes them in the Preamble), in the recent draft Constitution.
But is this enough to encompass the emerging
institutional
and constitutional settings of the Union?
The first type aims at an
institutional
reordering, so that inefficiencies and perverse incentives are removed, and the economy functions more smoothly and efficiently.
No
institutional
solution is purely neutral in its effects on relative incomes – and it is relative income and wealth around which political debate typically revolves.
Both the
institutional
and the behavioral responses to a crisis are fundamentally problematical.
Expanding education in countries where
institutional
failure, poor governance, and macro-economic mismanagement stymie investment is a prescription for low productivity and high unemployment.
Although large cities will remain as closed as ever, the new policy will dramatically weaken the
institutional
foundation of China’s long history of urban-rural and regional divides.
Thus, aid for trade, one of the key tasks on the WTO agenda, has weak
institutional
links to trade negotiations.
To make sure NATO enlargement will not lead to a new European divide, an
institutional
link between Russia and NATO could be in place.
But for a long-gridlocked EU, Macron’s proposed grand bargains could offer a valuable way forward – one that relies not on
institutional
changes, but on political trade-offs.
The major achievement of China's 17 years of
institutional
reform and economic growth has been the growth of a dynamic non-state sector consisting of private firms, self-employed businesses, corporate joint-ventures with foreign capital, and community owned rural enterprises.
In any case, one thing seems certain: in the absence of a sweeping overhaul, the UN may quickly follow in the footsteps of other
institutional
relics of the Cold War, such as the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe and NATO.
Amid the UK’s
institutional
changes in 1997, financial regulation was put in the hands of the Financial Services Authority (FSA).
Above all, there is no immediate international
institutional
context encouraging steady change and establishing standards and benchmarks: Burma must find its own path.
She has introduced policies, programs, and
institutional
reforms designed to support government-to-society and society-to-society diplomacy, alongside traditional government-to-government relations.
Resources are allocated inefficiently across the economy, with a corrupt
institutional
and legal structure that impedes private investment.
Such policies and
institutional
improvements increase productivity, promote competition, facilitate specialization, enhance the efficiency of resource allocation, protect the environment, and reduce risks and uncertainties.
While the US Constitution shows the limits of
institutional
safeguards, the role of political parties is clearly significant when it comes to limiting terms in power.
The absence of well-articulated common analyses and policy coordination has accentuated legitimacy deficits, encouraging leaders and publics to opt for partial narratives and eroding confidence in existing
institutional
structures.
Back
Next
Related words
Investors
Political
Their
Which
Economic
Countries
Reforms
Would
Framework
Financial
Reform
Arrangements
Policy
Other
Should
Could
Investment
Growth
Global
Social